NHS VS PRIVATE
Private GP vs NHS: When Paying for Faster Access Actually Makes Sense
A practical, honest comparison of private and NHS GP care — when each works best, and how many patients use both.
This is a practical question rather than an ideological one. Most patients are not trying to choose a side. They are trying to work out which route makes sense for the problem in front of them.
The NHS remains the right route for a great deal of care, particularly emergency and complex care. Private GP care becomes attractive when timing, continuity or easier follow-through matter.
ON THIS PAGE

Where private GP care tends to help most
Patients often choose private care because they want to be seen sooner, have more time in the appointment, access blood tests or referrals quickly, or speak to the same practice over time. That does not make private care universally better. It makes it better for certain kinds of need.
Where the NHS is often still the right route
Emergency care, hospital treatment, long-term complex multidisciplinary care and many public health pathways are still best handled through the NHS. A private GP should be honest about that. In many situations, the most realistic and useful approach is to use both systems at different points.
The difference
Consultation length and continuity
Two of the clearest differences are time and continuity. Longer appointments can make a real difference when symptoms are broad, complicated or recurring. Continuity also matters when patients do not want to keep starting from the beginning. Those are often the reasons private GP care feels different day to day.

Same-day appointments available. Book online or call 020 7736 7557.

Both systems
Using both together
Many patients use private GP care for faster access, a clearer explanation, or a practical next step, then continue parts of their care through NHS services. That is common and often sensible. The decision is rarely all or nothing. See our NHS vs Private page for a more detailed comparison.
FURTHER READING